My piece with the adjusted muffle:
> On Jan 25, 2019, at 10:30 AM, Rachel Knight <knig8...@icloud.com> wrote: > > Hi all, > > In super old scores, an asterisk was used, but that is not true of scores > today. The example below that says English Ballad is from 1942. The next one > is from 2005 and seems to be what is standard. The final one is one I created > last year with Finale so you could see what proportions they chose. (It is > extra large as the book is for younger students.) > > After studying these examples more, I adjusted the settings to make it > consistent with current examples. > > mufflePath= \markup \path #'0.15 #'((moveto -1.125 0) > (lineto 1.125 0) > (moveto 0 -1.125) > (lineto 0 1.125)) > > muffleMarkup= \markup \translate #'(1.2 . -1.5) > \combine \mufflePath \draw-circle #.75 #0.15 ##f > > It would be wonderful for harpists if this glyph could be added. > > Best, > Rachel > > <IMG_2899.jpeg> > > > > > <IMG_2897.jpeg> > > > > <IMG_2900.jpeg> > > > > > >> On Jan 24, 2019, at 10:21 PM, Werner LEMBERG <w...@gnu.org >> <mailto:w...@gnu.org>> wrote: >> >> >>>> This is Valentins code with a few values changed to get the >>>> appearance closer to what you are looking for: [...] >>> > >>> Perfect, thanks so much! >> >> Is the exact shape of this symbol `universal'? I.e., do German, >> French, and US publishers use exactly this shape? If the answer is >> yes the glyph should be added to the lilypond music fonts. >> >> >> Werner >
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